After watching Sherlock I was wondering – and I appreciate that this might sound like an odd question – do you find that you are consciously writing for widescreen viewing now?Probably since I got involved in any capacity in Doctor Who, which has the power of a big picture. And I tend to plot Doctor Who in terms of big pictures, so there’s that. And we can do big pictures really, really well now on television. Does that inspire your choice of director, too? Because I thought Paul McGuigan did a brilliant job with A Study In Pink? It’s beautiful. All credit to Sue Vertue, the wife. Who, after having seen Lucky Number Slevin and hearing that he was interested in doing television, suggested Paul. I love working with Paul, he’s been absolutely brilliant. He’s very savvy about working the screen in thirds, which you don’t see a lot of on television. Is that how you envisaged the look of Sherlock yourself?I wouldn’t claim that I would envisage it as well as Paul McGuigan does, because he’s got an extraordinary eye. Best director I’ve ever worked with. It was that kind of thing – I suppose I’d be using examples like The Ipcress File, a sense of playfulness with the visuals. Thinking we can actually do fun stuff. One thing that was very key was he was saying you should feel that there’s a Sherlock Holmes behind the camera as well. I thought that was a very astute thing to say.I want to ask about Watson, too. Because you’ve written him very economically. And when I’m used to seeing Watson, a lot of the time he’s doing explanatory work, and you’re seeing the story through his eyes. Yet, when you cast Martin Freeman, the audience brings pre-conceptions to him. But that was a very quiet and still portrayal he gave here.Well the thing that motivated Martin, and he did read the stories and it is there, is that [Watson is] a doctor and a soldier. He’s made of competence. And there’s never any suggestion – although [Arthur Conan] Doyle does quite like taking the piss out of Watson a bit – from Sherlock Holmes that Doctor Watson is anything other than the most competent man you will ever meet. Not a genius, like Sherlock Holmes. But utterly sensible, utterly brave, utterly reliable. And that’s critical, and that’s what Martin wanted to bring to it. This is the man who a genius would rely on. In the literary Sherlock Holmes stories, although he doesn’t think that Doctor Watson is very bright, he does think that he will get it right, and do it right. He is made of solid steel competence. And that’s what Martin was very keen to bring to the part.I think a lot of people expect Tim from The Office from him, too. But he went right against that. I remember being quite surprised at the beginning that he was so adamant he wasn’t going to do those kind of comic riffs. And as he grew in confidence he did start throwing in a few. His reaction to the end of the gay conversation [in A Study In Pink] I think is hilarious, and he can do that. But he was very keen to separate it from Tim. Not because he was trying to be wanky, just that that’s not what Doctor Watson is. He’s a soldier, and he kind of likes it.Did you find 90 minutes, again from a writing perspective, to be luxurious, particularly after you were packing so much into the last couple of episodes of Doctor Who? The last couple were long, but do you know, everything is the right length. That one [A Study In Pink] was just right, but I remember wondering if it was too leisurely. Stories are the length they are is the truth, and sometimes you are feeling as though you’re having to mash it down. Fortunately, in Doctor Who they’re very flexible with running times. But [Sherlock] felt right, it felt the right rhythm to me. Although there’ll come times where I’m slightly cagier and say I wish it’d be 100 minutes! Six, including the Christmas special? Yeah. I’m basically following what Russell did. Having worked out the sums and worked out how he does it, I thought that’s a perfect way of doing it. It’s extraordinary, but it’s great fun too! Great fun, so long as it doesn’t kill me.I hope it doesn’t…! [Laughs] You know, I hope it doesn’t too. I’d be against that!Steven Moffat, thank you very much…